Has anybody here used these? If so, what are your thoughts?
I actually have an older Black & Decker hand-held corded leaf blower. It is quite powerful and as a result, there is an unpleasant force which pulls on my back. That is why I am looking for something I can wear as a back pack.MasterMech said:It's important to remember that battery is changing the configuration of our equipment in addition to the power source. Many of the handheld blower options are more powerful than the EGo backpack unit. Backpack battery systems combined with a lightweight handheld blower may become the more common configuration instead of having a semi-flexible tube connected to a backpack power unit.
https://egopowerplus.com/commercial-blower/
https://www.stihlusa.com/products/blowers-and-shredder-vacs/battery-blowers/bga200/
https://www.makitatools.com/products/details/CBU01Z
The whole backpack battery solution doesn't help at all with cost - but the backpack is useful with other tools as well as long as you don't mind the tool being tethered to the backpack via a cord. Much like the contractor power tool segment, we'll see several instances where the battery is much more expensive than the tool itself.
Have you considered hiring the job out? When moving from NY, I hired a crew to come in and do a spring clean-up despite having the tools to do it myself. Was not very expensive, and saved me a ton of time. I lived in an Oak forest and two big cleanups annually kept the leaves from getting deeper but that was about it. :lol:Deadlawn said:I actually have an older Black & Decker hand-held corded leaf blower. It is quite powerful and as a result, there is an unpleasant force which pulls on my back. That is why I am looking for something I can wear as a back pack.MasterMech said:It's important to remember that battery is changing the configuration of our equipment in addition to the power source. Many of the handheld blower options are more powerful than the EGo backpack unit. Backpack battery systems combined with a lightweight handheld blower may become the more common configuration instead of having a semi-flexible tube connected to a backpack power unit.
https://egopowerplus.com/commercial-blower/
https://www.stihlusa.com/products/blowers-and-shredder-vacs/battery-blowers/bga200/
https://www.makitatools.com/products/details/CBU01Z
The whole backpack battery solution doesn't help at all with cost - but the backpack is useful with other tools as well as long as you don't mind the tool being tethered to the backpack via a cord. Much like the contractor power tool segment, we'll see several instances where the battery is much more expensive than the tool itself.
I see that there are now 4-cycle backpack blowers. I might go this route. I just hate the noise and smell of 2-cycle motors!JerseyGreens said:I just sold my battery powered Ego backpack blower and got a Stihl. The difference is night and day.
I still have numerous Ego tools but their backpack blower was not cutting it out for me.
I used to hire it out, but it cost $400-$500 each cleanup. If I could get it done for half that I'd pay it in a heartbeat!MasterMech said:Have you considered hiring the job out? When moving from NY, I hired a crew to come in and do a spring clean-up despite having the tools to do it myself. Was not very expensive, and saved me a ton of time. I lived in an Oak forest and two big cleanups annually kept the leaves from getting deeper but that was about it. :lol:
That's outrageous! I have never hired a lawn service, so I had no idea what these guys charge these days.BigBlue said:I used to hire it out, but it cost $400-$500 each cleanup. If I could get it done for half that I'd pay it in a heartbeat!MasterMech said:Have you considered hiring the job out? When moving from NY, I hired a crew to come in and do a spring clean-up despite having the tools to do it myself. Was not very expensive, and saved me a ton of time. I lived in an Oak forest and two big cleanups annually kept the leaves from getting deeper but that was about it. :lol:
Yeah and he was on the cheaper range. But in their defense I tried to look at it from their perspective: a crew of 5 for 4+ hours, plus machine time (mowers, blowers, line trimmers) doesn't seem too egregious (roughly $20/hour/person).Deadlawn said:That's outrageous! I have never hired a lawn service, so I had no idea what these guys charge these days.BigBlue said:I used to hire it out, but it cost $400-$500 each cleanup. If I could get it done for half that I'd pay it in a heartbeat!MasterMech said:Have you considered hiring the job out? When moving from NY, I hired a crew to come in and do a spring clean-up despite having the tools to do it myself. Was not very expensive, and saved me a ton of time. I lived in an Oak forest and two big cleanups annually kept the leaves from getting deeper but that was about it. :lol:
Well I guess it all depends on property size too. How much land do you have?BigBlue said:Yeah and he was on the cheaper range. But in their defense I tried to look at it from their perspective: a crew of 5 for 4+ hours, plus machine time (mowers, blowers, line trimmers) doesn't seem too egregious (roughly $20/hour/person).